While many braved the frigid waters across the Okanagan in Polar Bear Dips to ring in the new year, paddleboarder Lina Augaitis-Dye celebrated a bit earlier with a third-place finish in Paris in early December among 1,000 racers in the APP World Tour.
After returning to racing this year, the Coldstream mother of two 鈥 who is on maternity leave from a teaching position 鈥 finished second in London in a distance race and third in Osaka, Japan, in sprints before capping it off with a bronze prize in Paris.
鈥淧aris is pretty special,鈥 Augaitis-Dye said, noting these waters aren鈥檛 to be used by paddleboarders.
The event, a part of Association of Paddlesurf Professionals World Tour, took place during a boat show in Paris 鈥 which was conveniently indoors 鈥 while one thousand paddleboarders braved the freezing waters.
鈥淚t was December,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really cold.鈥
鈥淭he river race was really kind of spectacular,鈥 Augaitis-Dye said. 鈥淭he French, they鈥檙e a little bit crazy to make it all happen.鈥
The race began in the dark and navigating the waters in the dark among a massive crowd was no easy feat, she said.
鈥淚 was supposed to start in the front,鈥 Augaitis-Dye said, as the 50 or so professional paddleboarders, herself included, were to be in the first heat. But the start, she said, was 鈥渃haotic.鈥
Augaitis-Dye started in the wrong spot and instructions were being tossed around by organizers and staff and by the time the race kicked off, she was already behind as she and her paddleboard got trapped behind a boat.
鈥淭hen another boat turned its engine on,鈥 she said, recalling the splashing waters. 鈥淚t was a really wild start.鈥
Instead of paddling with the pros, the 2014 World Series Champion wound up with the amateurs.
鈥淚 paddled really hard and throughout the 14-kilometre race 鈥 maybe a little over half way 鈥 I managed to pass all the girls and grab the top group of girls,鈥 she explained.
Those girls, she said, were the ones she was originally supposed to have started with.
Together, the women used drafting techniques 鈥 similar to cycling 鈥 to reduce drag, but Augaitis-Dye, who had fallen in earlier and was soaking wet, decided it best to paddle past and breakaway.
鈥淲e had a sprint off,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd in the end, I ended up third, but I was very happy with those results.鈥
She finished in one hour and 24 minutes.
READ MORE: Vernon paddleboarder wins Canadian Downwind Championships
Many of the women she raced alongside in the front of the pack train full time 鈥 compared to Augaitis-Dye, who has to balance home life, work and two young children under the age of four.
The trick to striking that balance, she said, is creativity.
Augaitis-Dye brought along her youngest to all the races because she flew for free; she would often push her children in a chariot while running or skiing; and lifting weights took place during nap time in the at-home gym.
Although Augaitis-Dye doesn鈥檛 consider herself a professional athlete, the proof is in the pudding 鈥 or in this case, the hardware.
鈥(Paddleboarding) is an amazing community,鈥 she said, offering words of wisdom to anyone considering the sport. 鈥淚鈥檝e competed in a lot of different sports and this community has really stood out to me.鈥
The sport has also allowed the Ottawa-raised paddleboarder the opportunity to compete in places all over the world. She鈥檚 competed in Fiji, California, Hawaii, Japan, Europe and beyond, but waters at home like Tofino and Kalamalka Lake and hold a special place in her heart.
Although Augaitis-Dye is waiting to see the 2020 schedule of events, she will resume her teaching role at Kalamalka Secondary this January and said she will see what opportunities life provides her with.
But Paris 鈥渨as a nice way to finish off the series,鈥 she said.
READ MORE: Atkinson out as Salmon Arm Silverbacks鈥 head coach
READ MORE: WATCH: Snowstorm no problem for Lumby man and dog
@caitleerach
Caitlin.clow@vernonmorningstar.com
Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

